EI Pay Rules To Be Changed As Tories Announce Details Of Reforms

OTTAWA - The Harper Conservatives came under fire Thursday moments after introducing new rules that would force the jobless seeking employment insurance to take lower paying jobs — for some, in unrelated occupations.

The changes to the employment insurance program will impact all jobless Canadians who apply for benefits, but will hit hardest so-called repeat claimants such as seasonal workers.

Human Resources Minister Diane Finley said the intent of the changes is to get Canadians off EI and on to jobs for which they are qualified.

But the opposition parties and labour advocates said the government had gone too far, accusing the Conservatives of blaming the victims of a poor economy and of seeking to bring down wages to please their business constituency.

She pointed out that currently only 40 per cent of Canada's 1.4 million officially unemployed receive benefits.

The changes, expected to go into effect early next year, would create new regulations spelling out what types of work the unemployed must be willing to accept and the effort they must make to find a job.

If they don't meet the new requirements, they face getting cut off benefits or not qualifying in the first place.

The new regulations create three categories of unemployed with a sliding scale of expectations for jobs they must accept — depending on how often they have collected benefits in the past, and the length they are currently on EI.

— Long-tenured workers, mostly employed over the past seven-to-10 years, can refuse a job outside their usual occupation that doesn't pay at least 90 per cent of their previous hourly wage.

But only for so long. After 18 weeks on benefits, they must lower their sights and accept any offer in a "similar occupation" within their industry that pays at least 80 per cent of their previous scale.

— Frequent EI claimants, who have been on the system at least three times for a total of 60 weeks over the past five years, will be expected to take a similar job that pays at least 80 per cent of their previous wage rate from the beginning. After six weeks, claimants will have to take any job for which they are qualified, even if it is not in the same field, at 70 per cent of the previous pay.

— "Occasional claimants" must accept work paying at least 90 per cent of their previous scale in the first six weeks, 80 per cent in the next 12 weeks and 70 per cent after 18 weeks on benefits.

This in-between category — representing about 58 per cent of claimants — is made up of those who do not fit within the work history of the previous two and can include young and new workers with up to six years of steady employment who have never collected EI.

In most circumstances, Canadians will need to accept an available job that is within an hour's commute of their home — longer in some places, such as big cities, where average commutes are longer.

"We want to help Canadians who want to work get back to work," Finley said at a news conference.

"These changes are not about forcing people to accept work outside their own area nor about taking jobs for which they are not suited."

Business groups generally applauded the measures, but labour spokesmen labelled them draconian and likely to drive wages down, and force some unemployed onto provincial welfare rolls.

Earle McCurdy of the Fish, Food and Allied Workers union said the government appears set on even further marginalizing seasonal workers, such as fishermen on the Atlantic coast.

"Clearly seasonal workers are a target. It's clearly designed to make third class citizens out of seasonal workers," he said.

Newfoundland Premier Kathy Dunderdale, a Conservative, has asked for a meeting with Prime Minister Stephen Harper to discuss the issue, but said at first blush the new rules appear to make little sense for some workers in remote areas.

"In a province where we don't have public transportation, if you were working a minimum wage job and you have to travel 40 miles away ... to work at another $10-an-hour job, is that sensible? Is that prudent?" she asked.

She pointed out that Ottawa has no qualms about subsidizing farmers. EI had been the support for the fishing industry, she said.

Senior officials speaking to reporters on background said the rules make no distinction for seasonal workers, even if they go back to the same job each year.

Critics also complained that the regulations need not be approved by Parliament, giving the government leeway to amend or change them any time it sees fit.

"It could all change again in six months," said Nash. "She has the power to do that. She's saying: 'Just trust us' and I don't think Canadians trust this government."

Liberal critic Rodger Cuzner foresaw another problem — that appeals of decisions against workers will now be handled by "a handful of political appointees based in Ottawa" and no longer by experts familiar with the local circumstances.

"EI is a crucial part of our social safety net," he said. "Changes of this magnitude should be enshrined in legislation, not made hastily on the back of a napkin."

Both Cuzner and Nash called on the provisions to be stripped from the budget omnibus bill so they can be reviewed by the appropriate House committee and Senate.

The rule changes also affect how government officials will judge whether someone who is unemployed has made a reasonable effort to find work.

To receive benefits, Canadians will need to prove they are genuinely looking for work — in big cities, daily — including applying for positions, attending interviews and keeping a record of their search activities.

The government said it will aid in the search by emailing them two "job alerts" a day, informing them of openings.

As well, the EI system will be linked to the temporary foreign workers program to ensure Canadians are aware of employers' needs.

"Bringing in temporary foreign workers is not acceptable, especially when we have Canadians willing to work," Finley explained.

Policing the new rules is another matter. Finley said the government will spend an additional $21 million, but that the majority of that funding will go to the job alert system and not toward hiring civil servants to enforce the rules.

Government officials say it is difficult to assess how much the new regulations will save the system, but expect that fewer than one per cent of the half million claimants will be cut off.

The Harper government first signalled in its March 2012 budget that it would "clarify" who can continue to receive benefits, taking aim at people with a long history of claiming EI.

According to Statistics Canada, 549,000 people were getting regular EI benefits in March, a figure little changed from the previous month. In fact, the agency says, the number of beneficiaries has been relatively stable since last September.

There were more people receiving benefits in March in Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, Ontario and New Brunswick, but the number fell in Alberta.

To receive benefits, individuals must first submit a claim and the number of claims provides an indication of the number of people who could become beneficiaries.

Nationally, the number of initial and renewal claims totalled 234,200 in March, essentially unchanged for the sixth consecutive month.

Provincially, claims fell 2.9 per cent in Ontario, 2.6 per cent in British Columbia, and 1.7 per cent in Alberta, while they rose 2.6 per cent in Quebec and 1.1 per cent in New Brunswick.

Statistics Canada reported this week there were about 237,000 unfilled jobs in February. That's about one available job for every 5.8 unemployed workers. The April unemployment rate was 7.3 per cent.